Saturday, August 22, 2009

n.The gourde (French), goud (Creole) is the currency of Haiti. Its ISO 4217 code is HTG and it is divided into 100 centimes (French) or santim (Creole).(from wikipedia)

[update: just learned in the comments that I got this wrong--it's CBC/CENTIMES. No wonder I had to go through "gourde" to find it --treedweller]

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Hi, all. treedweller here, filling in for Rex while he tries to improve his world puzzle ranking. I so wanted to say, "Ha, just kidding about not being able to finish, this was a breeze," but here you have the sum total of my efforts before I resorted to google. Not quite "two right answers and a couple of bad guesses," but almost. I didn't even know how to choose a Word of the Day, since it seems like half the grid was unfamiliar to me. I went with the currency, since we may as well all resign ourselves to learning All The Currencies Of The World (Past And Present). As is often the case, once things started to fall, I realized I should have known a few things and could have figured out a few more, but I'm on a deadline here. Regardless, I have doubts as to whether I could have finished this on my own, no matter how many days I carried it around with me to waiting rooms and bank lines. I chose to rate it Medium-challenging because it was extremely challenging to me, but that's a normal Saturday, so I figure it's maybe medium for those who routinely finish the hard ones. I just hope not to hear "Easy, Easy, Easy" in the comments today.

Google got me the NE, since I was able to find ROSSETTI (14D: "Beata Beatrix" painter) and SENTIMES. The former revealed our old friend, BRIAN ENO (16A: Co-composer of the "Prophecy Theme" in "Dune"), who usually just gets his last name into the grid. He was well disguised today, but when I saw that terminal "O" I had him. I still needed the obscure (to me) currency to finish the corner, but things were starting to roll and I was feeling pretty good. And . . . nothing. Back to google, where I learned about 27D: Home of the annual Gathering of the Nations powwow, the world's largest celebration of Native American Culture, ALBUQUERQUE.Man, just typing out that clue was an ordeal. Is there anyone who didn't get the answer from the first half, but knew it once they got past the comma? I think not. Hello, King Olaf.

Then I immersed myself for the first time in Dancing With the Stars, where I learned there were not one, not two, but three possible answers to 37A: Olympic Gold Medalist who was a "Dancing With the Stars" champion. First hit was Shawn Johnson, who didn't fit. A little farther down was Anton Apolo Ohno, who seemed very puzzleworthy but also did not fit. I went to the Official Site, where you should not go if you don't like auto-playing ads and videos to blare out of your computer unexpectedly. I learned that a new season is upon us, but still could not find KRISTI YAMAGUCHI. She finally turned up when I clicked through google to a site by a fan of the show.

Even with two Q's and a K, I still didn't gain much traction. I was up to this:Thank God for Orange, who already had the solution and her obscenely fast time posted by the time I finally learned to spell ROSSETTI. Here's the correct answer:

I'll spare you the play-by-play of my stealing of answers, but here's a fewBullets:

19A: Muffed on the green (foozled) -- I almost made this one Word of the Day, but decided I was not willing to admit it even is a word.

66A: Was close to failure (tottered) -- Teetered gave me a little traction in the SW, but I had to steal the OT to finish that corner.

1A: Spook's break-in (bag job) -- Okay, this a nice phrase that sounds real, I just Did Not Know It.

12D: One who may get dispossessed? (demoniac) -- who knew? Not me.

63A: Plumlike fruit (loquat) -- I can't pass a chance to mention the tree. I got it easily once I googled ALBUQUERQUE.

4D: Swingers' get-together? (jazz session) -- As you can see above, I had SESSION pretty early, and considered JAZZ, but I couldn't figure out any crosses to work with the Z's. Okay, I've resisted it long enough, FOOZLED??!! That sounds like what Ms. Tracy did to me with this puzzle. I never had a chance in the NE. It didn't help that I had "enmire" (which I assume I just made up, since google returns no definitions) instead of

1D: Cause to be Stuck (baffle) -- Come to think of it, that's really what Ms. Tracy did to me today. But it was a really nice grid, with only MTGES (40D: You can get them on the house: Abbr.) making me wince.

I'd better stop, since I just realized how late it is out there on the other coast. Sorry I couldn't figure out how to post any nice videos.

Kristi Yamaguchi: Not only was this a gimmie but why would a professional dancer be considered an amateur participant on Dancing with the Stars - duh???? Anyway Albuquerque and Jazz Session were also gimmies and three long answers on a Saturday opens the door wide. I got foozled contexturally but never heard the term bfore.

Trebek worked at the CBC. I went to confirm this at Amy's site, but there is no grid there ... !?

Woke up to furious pounding sound this morning. Wondered what the emergency was. Turned out ... PuzzleGirl couldn't get out of her own room bec. humidity had sealed the door shut. I rescued her.

We solved the puzzle together last night after dinner with Hudson Hawk et al. and we had most trouble w/ the FOOZLED section (never heard that word before). Didn't like / get the clue on ABROAD. DIdn't like JAZZ SESSION, despite the great letters in JAZZ, mostly bec. JAM SESSION seemed so much the better / more common term. Didn't like DO SAY. DO TELL, yes. DO SAY? Not so hot. The rest of it, though, was OK-to-Good.

PuzzleGirl was orgasmic about LOQUAT in a way I don't quite understand. I mean, it's a nice word, but ... I guess I'm just more of a KUMQUAT man myself.

Okay, first of all it wasn't Furious Pounding. It was tentative, polite yet ... increasingly desperate pounding. Really enjoyed this puzzle except for the NW (which I think treedweller referred to as the NE in a subtle yet brilliant tribute to Mr. Parker's directional dyslexia).

I did better than you, but the puzzle was definitely not Easy, Easy, Easy. It was full of traps, and she totally made up a few words (even if she had the foresight to do it years ago to make sure they'd appear in my dictionary today.)

Never seen the show, so I started with APOL(L)O ANTON OHNO. (It fits if you spell it wrong, and it still gave me RINK!) xABxTx was PABSTS. ACTAEON looks ACTAE-WRONG...at one point I had OCTAGON, with WOOD in for TOAD. I wasn't sure that Herd was a collective term, and a Latin abbreviation makes for a nasty cross. Tried STAMEN and PISTIL for GAMETE, and at one point even had EARNED A D for TOTTERED.

Finished in the NW, where WET JOB is the wrong kind of spook thing even though WAFFLE works too.

And I was gonna say something about FOOZLED, but I realized I probably had seen it in the collection of Wodehouse golf stories I read. Yup, in the first story, in the second...

LOQUATs would be my favorite fruit if they were available here. We had two loquat trees, which set fruit exactly once in their short lives. They need about two weeks of temps above freezing in December/January, which only happened the one time in Dallas.

Prolific fruit producers, loquats, and the entire department had a chance to try them. The next year was a stretch of more than a week of sub-freezing temperatures, which killed them right off. Sad.

Torment. I was so baffled and foozled by the NW that I lost my will to solve for the more possible sections. Jazz Session? "Let's get out our saxes and have a Jazz Session!" or "I'm going to the Bluenote to catch a Jazz Session!" I know the phrase exits, but it sure doesn't come trippingly from my tongue. Neither does "ablare" for that matter. And I don't think I've ever heard someone say "Do Say". And am I supposed to know the names of Russian oblasts? (or am I just bitter because I chose Omsk from the Wikipedia list?)

The NW was a perfect storm of contorted clues for me. Congrats to anyone who solved this without Google!

Thank you for a very funny,and honest writeup, treedweller!I had the same solving experience as @edithb. Started last night, but kept crashing into brick walls.This was quite a challenging Saturday for me.

Well, 1D says it all for ME! I spent most of the time baffled. I think I was on Karen Tracey's wavelength for a lot of clues (Hit to the wallet, for instance,) but having BOGEYED instead of the obscure FOOZLED put me in the weeds. I resorted to Google pretty quickly for BENET and BRIANENO...and the never-viewed Dancing show Google just gave me Shawn Johnson. Not A Lot of Help! All in all, I'd have preferred to be stuck in a room!

Clever cluing....but all in all a painful puzzle. (I still do not get MTGES>)Hats off to Treedweller for being willing to take this on!

Ah, treedweller. You get an "A" for admitting that you were stuck and a "B' for effort. You gave up too soon.However, the Saturday puzzle is usually a killer but this one wasn't as difficult. It took me about 45 minutes. Better luck next time.

Foozled, or maybe foozzled, anyway have watched golf and read golf magazines for over 30 years and never heard or seen the word. When will constructors stop making up words to fit the fill? Or at least come up with a more accurate clue. Tough and NO FUN puzzle. Golfballman.

At the end of Shakespeare's plays, "Exeunt Omnes" means "All leave." I had "Begone!" first...liked it better.

In a large (palatial) house, a wide corridor would often be called a gallery and might be a site for hanging the ancestral portraits...doncha know. Only having BrianEno in place gave me that one, so you are not alone.

Now, please--someone help me out on the MTGES ...OH, duh. Mortgages. That's not how I would abbreviate it. Mean, mean, mean.

1D, BAFFLE, was almost the last word I got before giving up with 2 or 3 wrong letters. Just could not come up with FOOZLED. And I was hung up on 23 A being either HOPS or LEGS, thinking only of airline "quick flights." Must admit LAMS is perfectly right.

Today's Latin lesson: EXEUNT is indeed the plural third person form of "goes out", as @Elaine notes. The third person singular Latin word is "exit", which was adopted intact into English. There is a famous Shakespearean stage direction, "Exit, pursued by a bear."

Thanks for the very entertaining writeup treedweller, tough puzzle for your guest debut! This was about 60% intense staring, 10% AHA! and/or 'aw groan' and 30% googles. Tried 28A: BANKS (as in Tyra) haha. Would have been hilarious if it was right. In golf, Fozzle is a game of six coins. End of each hole, you get a coin if you did something very good or very bad. (good: Birdie bad: sand, water, lose your ball, etc) You collect or give away coins through the game. Object is to have no bad coins at the end. If you do, you pay. I've played this game; never knew it was called Fozzle. What I learned today:A knot of toads: The word knot is derived from the Anglo Saxon word cnotta for a knot. A knot of toads in this sense would be a small group or cluster.Source: Webster's 2nd Unabridged Dictionary, page 1006@MARA - funny LOL postThanks to Karen Tracey, you beat me good. I look forward to the rematch.

@MaraYES! Wholly agree. "Ablare"--hardly defensible."Do say"--no; DO TELL, yes.And JAM SESSION, but not JAZZ SESSION. But I guess a puzzle constructor gets to do a little fudging.I thought "STACCATO" for a stop in a *performance* was a bit much; playing a note in a clipped fashion is staccato, but you are not abbreviating the performance (or indeed, the beat.) I thought that cluing was uninformed.

And I'm not just saying that because this puzzle had me on the ropes. Musical terms have specific meanings.

I'm feeling pretty good about this. I managed to finish three fourths of this thing with the help of some wild guesses and more time than I will ever admit. But I have to do other things today as well so I came here to finish the upper NW which I thought was simply impossible. I also got Kristiy's last name wrong since I have never heard of her and don't even know how I got her first name. Those wild guesses helped. I remain undaunted.

Re MTGES: I do software design in the financial industry. That said, a lot of my financial knowledge is empirical, outside of my direct responsibility. But I do know that "MTGE" is the accepted industry standard abbrev.

ANTIGONUS:...But my heart bleeds; and most accursed am ITo be by oath enjoin'd to this. Farewell!The day frowns more and more: thou'rt like to haveA lullaby too rough: I never sawThe heavens so dim by day. A savage clamour!Well may I get aboard! This is the chase: I am gone for ever.

Yikes, this was a killer. Flailed around with this for an hour last night and got the NW and SW done. Another hour this morning got everything else but the NE where I just could not sort things out. FOOZLED and BAG JOB are just unknown to me. I should have known OREL, but it would not come and I had no idea who wrote "By the Waters of Babylon."

Interestingly, FROZEN was my first entry in the grid which later gave me OREIDA. Everyone else seems to have gotten that in reverse.

@JannieB: I have to agree with @Raul that you're probably thinking of Snagglepuss. Having just watched the clip (I've not seen Snagglepuss since I was a child), I was immediately struck by the fact that this character sounds astonishingly like Bert Lahr. I'm guessing this was an intentional homage to the Cowardly Lion? I'm also just realizing that Snagglepuss was probably the first gay cartoon character I ever saw as a child. I mean a pink lion with a bow tie, collar, and cuffs? Heavens to Murgatroyd!

@Bob Kerfuffle: I have never seen A Winter's Tale (source of the stage direction Exeunt, pursued by a bear) in the theatre, but I've read the script and wondered how on earth would one stage that?

Fantastic! For me, this puzzle supports the hypothesis "if I stare at it long enough, then I'll eventually get the answers." I was stuck at the dealership with no internet connection for 2 hours while they fixed up my car. Thanks for keeping me occupied Ms. Tracy! -Michigal

Treedweller: brave move filling in on the Blog on a Saturday! Great write-up, as this was a toughie!Good to see Brian Eno get the full treatment for all the heavy lifting he does in puzzles (I'm listening to Roxy Music as I type this).

@ Clark: one note does not a performance make, to my mind. I mentioned that I will clip a staccato note, but the beat is not shortened, so I remain nit-picky about this one.

All in all, though, it made little difference in the end; I came here to get the rest of the NW. Usually when I start by filling in three answers at once,(abroad, Edsel, bogeyed) I continue strongly in a section. Of course, when one is wrong.... Tsk. So, i burned to the waterline.

Snagglepuss's voice was patterned after that of actor Bert Lahr (who is famous for playing another lion, the cowardly one in the 1939 production of The Wizard of Oz), and was provided by Daws Butler (an old hand at mimicking real actors for cartoon characters — his Peter Potamus sounded like Joe E. Brown, and his Wally Gator like Ed Wynn). Butler was so good at the Lahr imitation that when the character was used as a spokestoon for Kellogg Cereals, Lahr sued, and the commercials had to give Butler a credit line so nobody would think it was Lahr plugging the cereal. (toonipedia)

In my hopeless struggle to conquer the North, I put ENABLE for 1D, "Cause to be stuck"... Why you ask? As in being an "enabler" for an alcoholic for example. And I had BRAINIAC in lieu of DEMONIAC... they get to feeling dispossessed, you know...Oh, what Saturdays do to us!

Actually, I had a relatively easy time with the entire area from KRISTI YAMAGUCHI on south. I just happened to see her dance in the finals as I was flipping through channels and it opened up the whole south for me.

My grandparents garden had a LOQUAT tree and we used to climb it and get fresh fruits that were the best I've ever tasted. I wish I could grow them in Michigan. @Treedweller, any hope?

Like Anonymous, I got this one by dint of more or less constant staring. I'd be completely flummoxed (perhaps even FOOZLED), then something would pop into place and let me make lots of progress.

In the NW, I slowed myself WAY down by having "slumps" instead of GLOOMS, which kept FROZEN and ORE-IDA off my radar far too long.

I never googled, but that only means I finished with a big old mistake almost square in the middle: "Actaron" instead of ACTAEON, so "Rt. Seq." instead of ETSEQ. I figured something was wrong, and that it was in the "rt" part, but Could Not figure it out.

I laughed when I saw the solution grid atop this post! Well done, Treedweller.

I am hell on my guest bloggers. A Saturday guest blogger at my site is charged with writing about three themeless puzzles, one of them (Newsday) often harder than the NYT. And Sundays! That's four Sunday-size puzzles and a themeless. The astonishing thing is that I can always find someone willing to take on the job. People are so nice!

@SethG -- I wanted Appollo Ono, too but since I knew I didn't know how to spell it, I didn't write it in and therefore didn't get too messed up by it. When I figured out that it was, in fact, Kristy Yamaguchi, I unfortunately thought I knew how to spell it. Sigh. Thanks a lot, Kristi with an I. Do you dot it with a little heart? Blech.

@Rex and PuzzleGirl, funny coincidence. I woke up to knocking this morning, as well. My no-longer-a-baby had climbed down from his crib and was knocking on his door to be let out. I love that he knocked. You know, crying would have been so immature...

YOWSA! This one was tough! Karen Tracey, again, who last time entertained us with FLOUNCE. But FOOZLED?! I wanted to call a friend, @imsdave.@Meg, I wanted FONZIED for a while, too. Why not?@Elaine, I like your using the word, "uninformed" - nicely gentle.

@treedweller, you mensch! You are the best, most straight-up good sport of all time. Together, Mr. F and I, only now, settled on our final answers and can start our day. I look forward to your next write-up.p.s. My first entry was ENMIRE, too!

Definitely Challenging in my book. I managed with only two Googles (BENET and NITA -- had RITA) despite the large numbers of Naticks. I've never heard of KRISTIYAMAGUCHI, LABATT, OREIDA. I had SLUMPS (for GLOOMS) for ages, guessed DEMONIAC and CENTIMES, still don't know why LETS is the answer to 29D (oh wait, it's LET'S, clever).

I guess I did finish it but it was a real slog and not at all enjoyable.

The top solving speed on this puzzle is 2:34 (so far). Assuming that it takes almost 2 min. to read the clues and enter the answers, this means that this solver processed all the complexities of the puzzle in around 30seconds... the whole TOTTERing, FOOZLED, DEMONIACal,LOQUAT-bearing BAGJOB!

A rough one I didn't finish even WITH google. I had "muzzled" for 19A, I figured that "muffled on the green" was what your dog might be in the park. After the usual Saturday morning first gaping glance at the clues, my first entry was exeunt.

Okay first. Googling for answers? Heresy. Second, 'jazz' session isn't more obscure than 'jam', it's just plain wrong. No one who follows, enjoys, or understands the music, or had a passing familiarity with jazz in the first place would use the term. Or rather, misnomer.

Thanks treedweller for you honest and entertaining write up. Like most everyone else, I struggled with the NW. I couldn't get past ENMIRE and I never heard of BAG JOB or FOOZLED. I had to google BRIAN ENO (did not like the Prophecy Theme I heard on youtube either) and took a guess at CENTIMES. The top part of this puzzle was extremely challenging for me.

LOQUAT trees grow here. We have volunteers pop up in the landscape often. Fish crows swarm our neighbor's trees when the fruit it ripe and apparently drop the seeds all over our yard.

harleypeyton--I'm a big jazz fan but couldn't come up with jazz session. Even so, it is a phrase that comes up a lot on google and has been used as the name of albums, radio shows, club nights, etc., so I don't think it's fair to say it's "just plain wrong" or a misnomer.

I never heard of Jazzsession used in this context before or BagJob either. But the way I have always done puzzles is to "Go with what fits" and worry about the dictionary later.

It's funny that knowing KMT's penchant for Scrabbly words made JAZZ a gimme and realizing she was probably going for BLACK BagJob and Demoniac . . . just an ALT spelling of Demonic. The more ambitious the puzzle, the more I am likely to run into these things, unless, of course, your name is Patrick Barry. Beats the hell out of unopen (meaning Close) or recarve (meaning God knows what.)

I'm not sure why I remember Foozled but I was a caddy at the Officer's Club on Dover AFB when I was in high school although the golfers on this blog seem to be split on the term.

Before the night gets old(er)...I had a terrrrible time, got behind Aunt Google's skirts, still got BAFFLEd in the NW. Refused to come to the blog. Kept sweating it...only to have fozzled when I should have FOOZLED, with other consequent errors.

I felt so bad I didn't want to come here to find everyone had done it in record time. WHAT A RELIEF!

I think, treedweller, you could have rated this "Challenging" and gotten little argument. By the way, bravely undertaken and nobly done!

@Harleypeyton, if you were an educator, wouldn't you encourage students to do as much of the puzzle as they could and then follow through by researching the fill they did not "get" and reading about the subject at hand? At what point do any of us quit learning? Even the most curmudgeonly among us, the FIL, has had to admit that the existence of Google has caused an increase in reading and proactive inquiry, the downside of which I fail to grasp. @Xman, hats off to your persistence with "Auntie Google."

Thanks to everyone for the support and compliments. I'm glad people enjoyed it. Not to fish for more sympathy, but you might be interested to know that, when I felt it just had to be finished because it was so late in NYC, I was adding 3 hours to the clock on my laptop. Unlike my cell phone, the laptop did not automatically update from Central time to Pacific. So I rushed out the final posting at a little after 6am Eastern. It's amazing how frazzled and foozled I was, feeling like I was going to be late. Rex makes it look so easy!

As for LOQUATs, they do grow well in Austin (@R_C)--this was a really big year for fruit there--but I do not know how they'd do in Michigan (@foodie). I like to think I have a pretty good understanding of the trees I see every day, but it's amazing how much that changes when I leave Texas. I can only identify about 20 percent of the trees I'm seeing here, and I have never even been to Michigan. I recommend you find a good, local nursery (don't bother asking at the big box chains) and see what they say about it.

I feel a lot better about my experience after coming here. I worked on this slowly, but just couldn't get the NW without googling for Benet. After that I still wrote in ablaze (though it seemed wrong) instead of ablare (which doesn't seem much better).

The word foozle does not exist in the modern language, at least in the United States. I grew up with the game, played competitively for years, professionally for 2. Still play competitively today. Of all the ridiculous words and expressions that have their foundations in the game of golf, foozle is one whose usage must have long ago faded.

I can't believe it, I just posted a very long comment about the Lollapuzzoola and it disappeared. It was hexed!

Today's puzzle? It was my 8th today, and

foozledbagjobdemoniacloquatLabattActaeon

just were new to me. I also had hops for lams/

I like idle chat, knows best and I'm going to try to use exeunt.

@Greene: you are very funny.

I had a fantastic time in Queens, probably only my second or third foray into that borough after U.S. Open matches.

Ryan and Brian, and their wonderful wives, did a great job organizing and keeping this show going! Almost three times as many participants as last year, many, many puzzle bigshots from both the constructing and solving area. It was hard work, 5 puzzles and other (fun) requirements, but the puzzles were of great quality, surprising difficulty sometimes, and I think all made especially for this tournament.

Afterward there was great quality pizza (this from a non-pizza eater) and many interesting conversations and tickling of the feet of Joon's little boy, after which the Champ, Dan Feyer and his partner, Gretchen drove me and two other women back to Manhattan.

@treedweller, I loved your write up!! I laughed so hard when I saw your "pre-Google" grid - it looks so similar to my first pass grid, including enmire. We even had a similar cheating order, uh, method of inquiry.

I usually skip the Saturday puzzle because it is just too full of things I have yet to learn. Sometimes I"ll solve them after the solution is posted to see the ratio of red corned cheat squares to regular squares.

More treedweller, I say. I wanna see what he can do with a Wednesday.

:-)

Oh, and husband who is the rock solid go-to for sports answers and who has been golfing for decades says NO to foozle, not that I got that far.

Foodie, as of midday when I looked at the applet standings, the fastest time that I know was legit (Byron Walden) was a hair under 6 minutes. It took me and Howard Barkin 6:something, and Dan Feyer was behind us. The 2:34 time, if it didn't say "tylerhinman" beside it, was bogus (someone pre-solving and typing in their answers).

Treedweller - Loved the write-up! You have established your street cred with all of us Real People. My husband, the golf expert, guessed "two-putt" for 19A. A two-putt would be a par not a muff, but no other numbers of putts fit. Just e-mailed him the "real" answer, foozled, and am waiting for reply.

Even my hair is foozled! Well done, T. I hung in there, but still foozled. Foozled, foozled!May as well use the dang pain in the buttword. Will probably NEVER use it again in theReal World, Ms. Tracey.

ABLARE is one of those words that makes logical sense after the fact but obviously doesn't on its surface. I had all but the R and thought blaring which, as we all know, is a real live word but ABLARE, not so much.

This is what I expect from Ms. Tracey and she didn't disappoint. Horses for courses and odd words for odd minds (like mine.) And apparently Ms. Traceys. Talk about being on the same wave length.

I hadn't finished the Saturday and was just here to check out what Rex thought of Sunday, but the very unfinished grid caught my eye.

I got further than you without googling, with the whole southwest done, and CENNTIME with two Ns because damnit I knew gourde was French, but had somehow missed that it was supposed to be plural. My favourite word that I made up for this crossword puzzle was TWOZIED: see that's when you get the ball on the green and should get it in the cup in one shot, but you don't so you have to make a second putt. Two putts, TWOZIED. Makes perfect sense to me.

Your guest blogging was much appreciated: love the stages of solving. Now we can all dream of being guest bloggers here.

Noble effort. My wife and I agonized over this puzzle longer than about any other NYT puzzle we've ever done. I'd definitely rate it more than medium-challenging.

"Artemis" was a noble try, but it was a bit premature, eh? We knew that would screw too many other right things up, but didn't know Artaeon, so we had to leave that blank. And "sentime" was just "settling for something to make it work," I think. You know that feeling when you write something and say to yourself, "it doesn't feel right, but I can sort of force it in there?"

Mtges messed us up, too. All in all, it was a week of frustrating breakfasts (when we do the puzzle). As misery loves company, we were kind of glad to see that you found it challenging, too.

Yesterday (the day before?) there was some comment from an anon about everyone being geniuses on this site. Now, I'm sure many of you are - but Treedweller's experience mirrored mine in so many ways. I laughed out loud at the near empty grid posting. She made me feel good about being just "above average" smart :)

BAGJOB made me giggle a little bit. Now, I get that SUEDE has a nap, in a sense, but why kid that has a nap? What does "kid" have to do with it? I'm BAFFLEd. I was also annoyed with WHENS - When's the last time you brushed your teeth? is all I can make of it...

Yo XMAN - I guess so. Though I'm still nagged by the clue - the kid goat doesn't have naps. The suede that is made from his/her skin does. I'm being nitpicky - and maybe ignorant. Anyway, I guess SHE thought she was being clever ;)

Very late post from syndication land as I didn't have time to do this puzzle until late on Sunday, and I finished(?) it Monday morning.

I have two comments for Elaine:

1) Staccato is a great answer to the clue - a staccato note has the sounding time of the note shortened in performance. The beat is the same, but the note sounds shorter than its written time, i.e. a quarter note sounds for about half the time when staccato, with the other half of the beat being silent.

2) A puzzle constructor may get to do a little fudging, but to fudge the entire NW corner is just plain mean!

Also, Kristi Yamaguchi won Dancing with the Stars either last season or the season before (not going to waste time Googling to verify when). I agree that she may have had an unfair advantage since figure skating has a lot of commonality with dancing, but she is not a professional dancer.